affordwatches

!!! First Egg Toronto Sheraton

March 26, 2011 - Toronto - Sheraton Centre

Linda Woods Reports:

A wonderful surprise this morning when the first egg for the 2011 Sheraton Centre was discovered. Tiago held tight to the nest tray and after about an hour waiting he finally got up and revealed the first egg of the nesting season.

Rhea Mae flew to the ledge but did not come to the tray while I was there. 

Expect the second egg Monday or Tuesday


!!! Sticking Close to Nest Box

March 25, 2011 - Etobicoke - Sun Life Centre

Kathy Reports:

This morning when I arrived Angel was sitting by the nestbox and then she flew over to one of the towers.  I assumed she was on her own but a few minutes later jack jumped out of the nestbox and flew off to head to his other site and Angel immediately flew back to the ledge and got into the nestbox.   I watched a few minutes and then she came back out but she’s been on the ledge right next to the nestbox every time I’ve checked for the past 4.5 hours.    She does seem a bit lethargic this morning and looks like she’s having a bad hair day on top of it all !

!!! We “HAD” an egg, but it’s gone now

March 24, 2011 - Port Colborne - ADM Mill

Doug Garbutt Reports:

On our frigid Wednesday morning this week I arrived at work bright & early to find the resident female warming a single egg amidst the snow banks surrounding her. She stayed on it the entire day. At 9am today (Thursday) the egg was intact & the adult was treating it as normal, incubating & turning it. At 10am I checked the monitor & low & behold both the egg & mother were nowhere to be seen! What the heck? I have no idea if she broke & ate the egg or if something else happened. There is no human or animal access to the box (other than birds). She has since been in & out of the scrape but has not laid another egg yet.

!!! No Eggs yet

March 24, 2011 - Toronto - Sheraton Centre

Linda Woods Reports:

No eggs yet at the Sheraton Toronto. When I visited this morning, both adults were not in my view. But they did leave foot prints in the snow. The play of light on the snow, leaves a smiley face.


!!! A First Egg?

March 23, 2011 - Toronto - Sheraton Centre

Linda Woods Reports:

Can’t be too sure at this time until I get a visual confirmation, but the activity at the Sheraton nest tray is indicating we are close to a first egg.

Last evening I checked the camera before the snow fall. One adult was in the tray and then sitting on the edge of the tray.

This morning a bird was lying down in the nest tray with all the snow around. Around 9:30 the bird moved and was seen sitting on the far end of the nesting ledge, sitting on the other camera frame. She later returned to lay down in the nest tray. She has returned this evening. I captured one shot late this afternoon / early evening and I can’t see an egg in the tray, but the adult peregrine has returned to the tray. Could she be keeping the nest warm with anticipation of the first egg? Please see pictures captured from the tray camera. Please be aware with the spring time change the clock on the camera did not adjust for the spring time  change.

More news tomorrow when I make the trip to the viewing port. Hopefully I’ll have coloured pictures to show as well.


!!! Bald Eagles Nest In Hamilton

March 23, 2011 - International, National and Local News

Frank Butson Reports:

From The Hamilton Spectator

John Burman

Even for eagles, it’s all about location

A pair of eagles are nesting high in a white pine on the Royal Botanical Gardens lands on the northern edge of Cootes Paradise. If there are eggs in the nest, they may well hatch mid-April.

Bald eagles may be born here A pair of eagles are nesting high in a white pine on the Royal Botanical Gardens lands on the northern edge of Cootes Paradise. If there are eggs in the nest, they may well hatch mid-April.

Ron Albertson/The Hamilton Spectator

If all goes well, Hamilton could soon be home to the first young bald eagles hatched around this side of Lake Ontario in more than 50 years.

And it all comes down to location.

A pair of eagles are nesting high in a white pine on the Royal Botanical Gardens lands on the northern edge of Cootes Paradise. If there are eggs in the nest, they may well hatch mid-April.

At the moment, all things point to the return of the first Lake Ontario-born eagles in Canada in the decades since pesticides and environment changes drove them into near extinction. There were only four active nests, or about 15 birds, by the early 1980s.

Environment Canada says no bald eagles have nested on the north shore of Lake Ontario since the late 1950s.

Elimination of DDT, which damaged the shells of eagle eggs well into the 1970s, and vast improvements to fish habitat in Cootes Paradise have played a hand in bringing the birds back to this area.

“This milestone is testament to restoration efforts of Project Paradise,” Tys Theysmeyer, RBG’s head of natural lands, said in a statement. “As we bring Cootes Paradise back to the condition it was before the 20th century, species that once called this area their home will continue to return.”

 The eagles were first spotted in the wilderness area west of Highway 403 in 2009, when the male was too immature to reproduce, said Tys Theijsmeijer, head of natural lands for Burlington’s Royal Botanical Gardens.

“We’ve just been waiting for the immature one to graduate to adulthood,” he said. “In the interim they built a nest.”

“We’re pretty sure that if they were going to lay eggs it was in the past two weeks,” he explained. “So we’re looking at mid to late April to see little heads poking up in the nest.”A hundred years ago, bald eagles were a common sight along Lake Ontario. But toxic pesticides slowly killed off most of the population.

“The water became polluted with DDT used in agriculture that washed off the land into the lake,” Theijsmeijer said. “The poison got into the fish, the birds ate the fish and it caused the shells of the birds to be thin and shatter.

“So we just ran out of bald eagles.”

DDT was banned in the United States in 1972 and in Canada in 1989, although its use had been restricted for more than a decade before that.

 The eagles have very specific requirements. They need at least 100 hectares of forest to rest and roost and it has to be adjacent to about 50 hectares of wetlands to allow them to catch fish.

The birds have forest and they have fishing in Cootes Paradise due to the steady improvement of the wetland since the creation of the fishway in 1997, which bars invasive carp and has fostered natural regeneration.

RBG has been trying to attract a nesting pair for some time. There are 31 active nests on the great lakes and another 39 north of the 49th parallel but, until now they hope, not a single nest on the Canadian side of Lake Ontario.

The gardens staff say several bald eagles have stayed in Cootes over the winter the past few years and finally a pair stayed over a summer.

Gardens staff built a platform high in a 33-metre white pine in March 2009 with the help of a Hamilton tree maintenance company, hoping a pair would make it their home.

Instead, a pair picked a pine two trees over and built a nest. The pair have built nests on the north and south sides of Cootes since. They have now reached maturity, returned to the north shore site and settled in, hopefully to raise a family.

With files from TorStar News Services

jburman@thespec.com

905-526-2469

How to view the eagles

The RBG has been careful to provide directions to enable those interested to get to the area of the nest without disturbing the birds.

And, they say, it would be a good idea to bring binoculars.

The closest view is from the Marshwalk Observation Platform:

The nest is located on the north shore of Cootes Paradise, about 400 metres directly west of the Marshwalk platform, with the nest set in a lone pine on a ridge in the middle of the Hopkins Wood special protection area.

To get to the platform, start at the RBG Arboretum at 10 Old Guelph Rd. and head west, walking down the Captain Cootes, Bull’s Point and Marshwalk trails to the observation platform. Its about a 1.5-kilometre walk from the arboretum parking area.

The view from Princess Point, at 335 Longwood Rd. in Hamilton, is from a spot near the fishway at the Desjardins Canal and the nest is clearly visible, but it is at a distance of two kilometres.

!!! No Eggs Yet.

March 23, 2011 - Etobicoke - Sun Life Centre

Kathy Reports:

Well despite the intentions and efforts of Jack the past few mornings,  it’s safe to say nothing yet.  I have noticed Angel has been sticking close to the nestbox the past few mornings so I was kind of hopeful however the temperature has gone from plus 10 yesterday to minus 12 with windchill and blowing snow this morning and she’s flying around or sitting on her web cam.  If she had an egg or two in the box, she would be trying to keep it warm in this mess I’m sure.  That being said, Jack could be on duty however it’s too blustery to see or stay out there too long so I’ll check again later if it calms down.  I know it seems early but prior to last year, Angel was always the first out of the gate here in Toronto and was at least one week ahead of other nest sites.  I guess with 2 sites and 2 females to attend to - it will be a week later like last year!

March 24th..update.

Very cold morning here, minus 11 with the wind chill but very sunny out.  Saw both Jack and Angel this morning.  She was in the nest box when he arrived with food however both then stayed out for almost an hour.  She ate her breakfast on the ‘mating’ corner and he stayed perched on the cam.  An hour later when I checked she was sunning herself on the cam.  I didn’t have time to check if he was nearby and in the rush to get inside wiped out on the ice and hobbled back inside.  Welcome to Spring 2011!

!!! Port Colborne Ontario - 2010 Summery

December 15, 2010 - Port Colborne - ADM Mill

Doug Garbutt Reports:

2010 was another frustrating season in Port Colborne. The site produced 8 eggs in 2 clutches with not one successful hatch. The 1st 4 eggs were produced by the territorial female from 2009 “Treasure” from Cleveland. We did not have a monitor early in the season but when we did get connected on Mar.27/10 there were 4 eggs under full incubation. By Apr. 10/10 all 4 eggs were gone. An intruding female is on site. The intruding bird is unbanded. Between Apr. 28/10 & May 06/10 the unbanded bird produced 4 eggs. However by May 11/10 there are only 3 eggs. On May 13/10 an adult breaks & consumes an egg. May 14/10 another egg is missing (don’t know how), leaving only 1 egg which was totally neglected & on July 25/10 removed from the scrape & dissected. The rotten egg was nothing but a rotten liquid soup. The eggs were not fertilized. The male for 3 clutches of 4 eggs in the last 2 years is the male we call “Buffalo Bill” from Buffalo NY (2007). In the last 2 years there have been 3 different females lay 4 eggs each yet none have hatched. We think Buffalo Bill may be shooting blanks & with a name like that it really is a shame!

!!! Keep Looking Up!

March 22, 2011 - Windsor - Ambassador Bridge

Dennis Patrick Reports:

Before I forget again, Dennis and I would like to say Thank You to Mark & Marion Nash of the Canadian Peregrine Foundation for their support in helping us when we have lots of questions and the banding of last years chicks. It went so smooth it was incredible. We just can’t Thank You both enough. Last Sunday we drove down to the Bridge again to check on Freddie and Voltaire, she was sitting on the pipe looking very pretty and preening herself, about fifteen minutes later she flew off to the right side of the bridge. Ten minutes later, Freddie flew in and landed on the beam, he then started to preen himself as well. We were there for over an hour, no sight of either going on the nest ledge while we were there.
We’ll keep updating as we see them on the site.
Gwen

!!! Finally…it’s time!

March 17, 2011 - Etobicoke - Sun Life Centre

Kathy Reports:

After weeks of sporadic courtship between Angel and Jack, egg laying time may be upon us.  This morning for the first time, Angel is on the ‘mating’ corner waiting for Jack - this is usually where she perches when she is close to and/or laying eggs.   The timing is right compared to past years - barring any interuptions relating to territorial issues like we had last year and a recent one. 

Two days ago, a young tiercel was on one of Jacks’ favorite perches and was chased out quite vigoursly by Jack.  It all happened so fast that I wasn’t able to ID him .  I didn’t even realize there was someone there as I was on the opposite side - until I noticed Jack divebombing something and just as I realized it might not be a pigeon a falcon flew down and up and then Jack chased him out of the territory heading south towards the lake.  Angel, after flying around in a panic and waiting impatiently for Jack to return - actually flew southwards to join in and they both returned to the ledge together after about 5 minutes.  Hopefully the poor tiercel was unharmed whoever he was.